
Benji is an imaginative eight-year-old boy, living with his parents in a mining village in Nottinghamshire amidst the spoil heaps and chip shops that characterise the last industrially bruised outposts of the Midlands, just before Northern England begins. His family are the eccentric neighbours on a street where all the houses are set on a tilt, slowly subsiding into the excavated space below. Told through Benji’s voice and a colourful variety of others over a deeply joyful and strange twelve-month period, it’s a story about growing up, the oddness beneath the everyday, what we once believed the future would be, and those times in life when anything seems possible.
1983 is steeped in the distinctive character of a setting far weirder than it might at first appear: from robots living next door, and a school caretaker who is not all he seems, to missing memories and the aliens Benji is certain are trying to abduct him.
'A beautifully written account of childhood in the early 1980s, Tom Cox's second novel cements his status as one of our very best authors . . . 1983 captures vividly the "newly turned-on big light" of the decade . . . A beguiling elegy to a lost world' - Matthew D'Ancona, The New European
'Playful and subversive . . . Retaining the author's trademark wit and deft characterisation, boundaries are well and truly pushed and the reader is challenged to face their own preconceptions of what they thought they were reading. Never dull and always thought-provoking, the novel sits alongside similar works such as Matt Haig's The Humans as an example of how fiction and humour can sometimes be a sharp tool to dissect the mortal condition' - Madrid Review
ISBN: 9781800755970
Dimensions: unknown
Weight: unknown
272 pages